Understanding Guitar Wiring

What is a potentiometer and how does it work?

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A potentiometer, or pot, is a variable resistor. This means as the knob shaft is rotated, the DC resistance will change. A pot is very simple by design, and once we review the components and their purpose they should be less mysterious. First, there are three lugs or soldering terminals on a conventional potentiometer (see diagram #2). The outside two are the ends of the resistive strip, and the center lug is connected to the "sweeper." The sweeper allows you to vary the DC resistance relative to its position along the resistive strip, or relative to the outer two lugs. If you connect to only the two outside lugs, you will have a resistor of the pots value —25K, 250K, 300K, 500K, and 1Meg are common guitar pots. This is how you can determine a pot's value.

Potentiometers come in two varieties, linear-taper and audio-taper.
The easiest way to see the difference between the pots
is to diagram their tapers (see diagram #3). You'll
see that the linear-taper pot's taper works at a 1:1
ratio. Audio taper, has a special logarithmic ratio.
Guitars usually use audio taper, because our ears don't
hear changes in volume in a linear fashion as you might
expect. As the volume increases, a greater change in
signal or sound-pressure is required to perceive a smooth
transition. Using a guitar's control knob settings as
an example, the actual change in volume between 2 and
3 is much less than the change between 7 and 8.